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Exotic Decor at Our Dallas store

Exotic Decor at Our Dallas store

We are fortunate enough to go on several trips a year to such exotic locations as India, China, and South America. During our journeys we stumble across unique items that might be vintage, antiques, or even the last one left. So, every trip, we're sure to bring our empty suitcases to fill with these rare finds so we can carry them back home.

Our Employee’s Home: Paige’s House

Decorative table accent

What is your role at Wisteria? I am the Senior Creative Manager, I manage all the photography for the catalog and web. I direct and edit the photography at the photo shoots and the styling on set.

Handmade Books in Jaipur, India

Making Books by Hand

This company was started when three young friends rented a booth at a trade fair 14 years ago to sell books and bags made of handmade paper. This Indian artisan has grown great lengths since then and now specializes in handmade paper, bags, books, and leather products. They are located in Jaipur, India and also have a small group of designers and workers from a small village outside of Jaipur.

 

Honey Mint Limeade Recipe

Ingredients: 2 cups lime juice (about 15 limes), 1 1/2 cup granulated sugar, 2 cups chopped and packed fresh mint leaves, 1/4 cup honey, and 1 lime, cut lengthwise for garnish.

Directions: 1. Bring sugar and one cup water to a boil. Stir until sugar is dissolved. 2. Add sugar syrup and mint to a blender; puree. 3. Pour through a very sieve and discard solids. 4. In a pitcher (at least 2-qts), stir lime juice and 1/4 cup honey until blended. Add 6 cups of water, stir, and chill. 5. Add sliced limes before serving.

 

Featured Wisteria product: Chinese Garden Stool w2060

 

Featured Wisteria product: Mexican Dishware

 

Featured Wisteria product: Through-the-Looking-Glass Table w1334Linen Settee With Wood Trim w2506Red Rim Metal Wire Basket w2542

 

Many of our customers are nice enough to send their thanks to us as well as including a few photos of Wisteria items in their home. Here are some images one of our customers sent to us.
We’d love to see more. Please email photos of Wisteria products in your home: blog@wisteria.com.

 


Our journey to create this little shop called Wisteria is really quite simple. We gravitate towards products we love and develop a collection around that.
We’re not really quite sure what it is about these mirrors that we love so, but we do know that while one can look great standing alone, several together really brings out the brilliance in each.

A simple image search can lend you several lovely photos of mirror collections. And we did quite a bit arranging and rearranging to finally get these beautiful mirror images. Now we want to see what you’ve done. Send us your photos of mirror collections (or any ol’ collection) in your home to blog@wisteria.com.

 

This Valentine’s Day, we imagine ourselves out of our predictable surroundings and into a bohemian, Parisian apartment preparing for a romantic evening indoors. The rooms would be small and intimate, the ceilings would be high and lofty, and the walls would be covered in rich tapestries and bold saturated fabrics. The accessories would be globally influenced and handmade by artisans and the furnishings would all be one-of-a-kind. And of special importance on Valentine’s Day, this fantasy flat would require simple yet unique floral arrangements. With the bohemian Parisian apartment as our inspiration, we decided to pair this traditional Valentine’s pallet of roses in crimson and cherry and combine it with bold graphic black and white accessories, mixing in rough finished ceramics and handmade textiles. The juxtaposition of rich bright fabrics with global influenced accessories transforms these simple floral selections into arrangements that are eclectic, modern and a little avant-garde.

This graphic Inlaid Flower Bone Tray adds interest and keeps the arrangement from being too soft and feminine. We filled the black urn with a mixture of pink ranunculus, burgundy and pink mini calla lilies, and a pair of pink banksias. Banksias are wildflowers native to Australia; their spikey exterior and unusual texture give the arrangement a contemporary and compelling look.

This lush little arrangement is practically effortless, accomplished by simply grouping a bunch of blooms together in a container. Just clip the blooms off a bunch of flowers, we used pink ranunculus, and place them in a clear glass container. They naturally will fall and lean into graceful positions. And when their petals open and unfold they resemble the soft layers of a ballerina’s skirt.

Feb 112010
 

We got a lot of snow today here at Wisteria. To commemorate this momentous occasion (since Dallas rarely gets this much snow), we stepped outside for a little fun!

 

The Global Fund for Children (GFC) dreams of a world where all children grow up to be productive, caring citizens of a global society. To this end, GFC supports small, community-based organizations around the world serving the most vulnerable children and youth, and they create beautiful multicultural children’s books that bring messages of tolerance and peace to children in the United States and abroad.

The children benefiting from GFC’s support represent the most marginalized populations: AIDS orphans, children displaced by conflict or migration, disabled youth, child laborers, and those who have no access to basic education and health services. Using this approach, GFC is creating lasting change and rewarding community leaders who are dedicating their lives to the futures of children in their countries.

Some of the innovative projects that GFC supports are mobile libraries in Ethiopia, where books are carried by donkey through villages without libraries; trauma support centers for women and children in Serbia who have been victims of trafficking; and community gardens in Uganda for AIDS orphans who are learning the important role of nutrition in healthy development.

GFC’s first grant, for $1,200, supported classrooms set up at train stations in India for the many children who live and beg on the train platforms. Since 1997, GFC has invested over $15 million in 375 community-based organizations in 73 countries, touching the lives of over 1 million children.

For more information about The Global Fund for Children, please visit www.globalfundforchildren.org.